Nature's Sternest Painter: Five Essays on the Poetry of George Crabbe |
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Page 11
... refers 30 Edmund Wilson , The Wound and the Bow , New York , 1947 . 31 " He wrote upon every occasion , and without occasion . . . and began to think of succeeding in the highest line of composition , before he had made one good and ...
... refers 30 Edmund Wilson , The Wound and the Bow , New York , 1947 . 31 " He wrote upon every occasion , and without occasion . . . and began to think of succeeding in the highest line of composition , before he had made one good and ...
Page 26
... refers are by no means the poor - houses of Aldborough . The emphasis on " true and natural ” manners , however , and the fact that these are to be drawn from models with which we are acquainted is interesting even though the context ...
... refers are by no means the poor - houses of Aldborough . The emphasis on " true and natural ” manners , however , and the fact that these are to be drawn from models with which we are acquainted is interesting even though the context ...
Page 99
... refers to Crabbe's " constant choice of the less pleasing parts of a land- scape for minute treatment , " 18 and , even though it is clearly not true that Crabbe's choice of these parts of the landscape is " constant , " particularly in ...
... refers to Crabbe's " constant choice of the less pleasing parts of a land- scape for minute treatment , " 18 and , even though it is clearly not true that Crabbe's choice of these parts of the landscape is " constant , " particularly in ...
Contents
CRABBE AND THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY | 1 |
CRABBE IN THE ROMANTIC MOVEMENT | 57 |
CRABBE AS NATURE POET | 88 |
Copyright | |
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Ainger Aldborough appear beauty Biographer Borough Broadley and Jerrold brothers Burke characters classical clearly concerned couplet Crabbe's narrative Crabbe's poetry criticism delight detail disillusionment doubt Dryden E. M. Forster Edinburgh Review eighteenth century English essay example F. L. Lucas F. R. Leavis fact feel fiction frame-story genius George Crabbe give grief Hall happy heroic couplet Huchon human Ibid interest Jeffrey Johnson later least Leslie Stephen less letter lines London lover Mary Leadbeater mind moral nature neo-classic never nineteenth century o'er object observation Parish Register particular passage passion Paul Elmer perhaps Peter Grimes poem poet poet's poetic poor Pope Posthumous present quoted reader realistic reason remarks Review romantic Saintsbury satire scene seems sense sentimental Sir Owen social Stowmarket tale taste things tion tone tradition true truth verse Village Ward words Wordsworth writing wrote youth